화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry, Vol.487, No.1, 57-65, 2000
Electrochemical preparation and characterization of electrodes modified with mixed hexacyanoferrates of nickel and palladium
Mixed nickel/palladium hexacyanoferrates have been prepared both as thin films and bulk precipitates (powders) attached to electrode surfaces. The mixed material does not seem to be a simple mixture of hexacyanoferrates of nickel and palladium, and it shows unique voltammetric and electrochromic characteristics when compared with the respective single-metal hexacyanoferrates. Electrodeposition of a mixed film is achieved by potential cycling in the solution for modification containing nickel(II), palladium(II) and hexacyanoferrate(III). It comes from elemental analysis that, in general, the stoichiometric ratios of nickel to palladium in mixed metal hexacyanoferrate films reflect relative concentrations of Pd(II) and Ni(II) in the solutions for modification. In the case of the films that have been electrodeposited from the solutions containing palladium ions in amounts lower or comparable with those of nickel ions, the mechanism of film growth seems to involve formation of nickel hexacyanoferrate during negative potential scans followed by simultaneous insertion of palladium ions as countercations into the system. In such cases, palladium ions tend to substitute potassium countercations at interstitial positions in the electrodeposited nickel hexacyanoferrate microstructures. We have determined the following stoichiometric formula, (K1.74-2yPdyNi1.13II)-Ni-II[Fe-II(CN)(6)] (where y < 0.72) for such films. At higher molar fractions of palladium in solutions for modification, the formation of a mixed phase of nickel/palladium hexacyanoferrate (in which both nickel(II) and palladium(II) are nitrogen-coordinated within the cyanometallate lattice) is expected. This seems to be more probable than simple codeposition of separate palladium hexacyanoferrate and nickel hexacyanoferrate microstructures during the film growth. Mixed (composite) nickel/palladium hexacyanoferrate films show long-term stability as well as promising charge storage and transport capabilities during voltammetric potential cycling. Well-defined and reversible cyclic voltammetric responses have been obtained in lithium, sodium and potassium electrolytes.